This is, in my opinion, the book to use to learn JavaScript at more than a surface level. The only other materials I recommend as much (but for a different level of learner) are the “You don’t know JavaScript” in-depth book series.In 2015, I was consulting for a distance learning program, administered by a major California University, that wanted to replace their current textbook (one of those “He
I started my professional life ~25y ago with a side project that by 2022 led to roughly 50 more side projects — The vast majority failed, some turned into 200 employee businesses, some others got acquired. In essence, I make a living out of side projects. Side projects are life. Your career is what I aspired to when I started in this industry over a decade ago. But what ended up happening was that
All these have a thing in common: he gave up because they weren’t immediate successes. Some even had traction: 5 users in 3 months isn’t the incredible outlier story you hear time and time again, but it’s 5 people you can talk to, listen to what they want (and why they signed up anyway), then you gear up from there.We’re too conditioned to believe in the stories of immediate success and MVPs makin
Almost everyone I know keeps a list of (easily forgettable) command line snippets somewhere. I can't imagine that HN folks would be any different :)So that said, could I please see your cheatsheet? I'll go first: https://github.com/fastily/cheatsheet I use my ebooks for reference: * GNU grep and ripgrep (https://learnbyexample.github.io/learn_gnugrep_ripgrep/) * GNU sed (https://learnbyexample.git
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